I feel like the drabble noms are for the true afficionados; I know I've heard every story on the list but lord knows I can't recall their content just by title. Would some truly giving individual with a velcro covered brain provide single line descriptions? AKA: Pest Proportions by Ashley Nerbovig (the one with the tiger-sized rat), etc.

Drabblecast 131- Hanging by Doug McIntire-- Western, a new sheriff tries to assert his authority in a lawless town.

Drabblecast 129- Tell-Tale Signs by Ralph Gamelli-- a man gains physical attributes of those he kills.

Drabblecast 128- The Story by Michael Young-- Cosmic Drabble. History of Universe in 100 words.

Drabblecast 127- The Place Where Dogs Go When They Die by John Medaille-- description of dog-Heaven. Poor puppy (or human?) gets placed in wrong one by accident.

Drabblecast 125- Prayer to Human by Christopher Perria--Robot descendants of humans worship and pray to ancestors in primitive fashion.

Drabblecast 124- Drabble- Navy Wife by A.S. Lowe-- circular Drabble, a woman gets a letter from her "dead" husband and also a letter saying that he is dead from Navy chaplain.

Drabblecast 122- The Most Wonderful Dream by Tim “ShoEboX” Crist-- man has a wonderful dream but wakes up in a box of cat litter.

Drabblecast 120- The First Swim by Richard Asbury-- bodies of water are scary/sacred to these natives, until a child cannonballs into a stream without thinking twice.

Drabblecast 118- Coiffuture Conundrum by Jake Webb-- man runs into himself from the future who has come back in time to not tell him to get a hair cut, no matter what.

Drabblecast 117- The Entertainer by Brett Reynolds-- an alien tries to control humanity's mind.... and by that I mean, a children's party entertainer tries to win over a room full of bratty kids.

Drabblecast 116- Tax Form Zero-G by Sonny Traylor-- a man gets out of being audited by the IRS by being sucked up into space.

Drabblecast 115- Drabble- The Absurdly Connected Machine by J. Alan Pierce-- Cosmic Drabble. Life and the Universe as we know it is all just part of a hugely complex Rube Goldberg machine, eventually simply spitting a silver ball into a small paper cup.